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Transcript
New Satellite Data Contradicts Carbon Dioxide Climate Theory
Industrialized nations emit far less carbon dioxide than the Third World,
according to latest evidence from Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency
(JAXA).
Global warming alarmism is turned on its head and the supposed role of
carbon dioxide in climate change may be wrong, if the latest evidence from
Japan's scientists is to be believed.
Japanese national broadcaster, NHK World broke the astonishing story on
their main Sunday evening news bulletin (October 30, 2011). Television
viewers learned that the country's groundbreaking IBUKU satellite, launched
in June 2009, appears to have scorched an indelible hole in conventional
global warming theory.
Standing in front of a telling array of colorful graphs, sober-suited Yasuhiro
Sasano, Director of Japan's National Institute for Environmental Studies told
viewers, "The [IBUKU satellite] map is to help us discover how much each
region needs to reduce CO2 [carbon dioxide] emissions."
Industrialized Nations World's Lowest CO2 'Polluters'
Indeed, the map at which JAXA spokesman Sasano was pointing been
expected by most experts to show that western nations are to blame for
substantial increases in atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, causing global
warming. But to an officious looking TV interviewer Sasano turned
greenhouse gas theory on it's head.
According to UN science the greenhouse gas theory says more CO2 entering
the atmosphere will warm the planet, while less CO2 is associated with
cooling.
Gesturing to an indelible deep green hue streaked across the United States
and Europe viewers were told, "in the high latitudes of the Northern
hemisphere emissions were less than absorption levels."
Sasano proceeded to explain the color-coding system of the iconic maps
showing where regions were either absorbing or emitting the trace
atmospheric gas. Regions were alternately colored red (for high CO2
emission), white (low or neutral CO2 emissions) and green (no emissions:
CO2 absorbers).
Bizarrely, the IBUKU maps prove exactly the opposite of all conventional
expectations revealing that the least industrialized regions are the biggest
emitters of greenhouse gases on the planet.
Yes, you read that correctly: the U.S. and western European nations are
areas where CO2 levels are lowest. This new evidence defies the consensus
view promoted by mainstream newspapers, such as the New York Times.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) had long claimed
that, "there is a consensus among scientists that manmade emissions of
greenhouse gases, notably carbon dioxide (CO2), are harming global
climate."
Findings Vindicate Skeptical Australian Climatologist
But the evidence supports climatologist, Professor Murry Salby of MacQuarie
University, Sydney, Australia who has been pilloried for daring to admit that
“our understanding of natural contributors to atmospheric CO2 is inadequate.”
Salby has an upcoming paper on this issue and is being vilified for it by
alarmist blogs such as Skeptical Science.
The Japanese satellite map shows regions colored the deepest leaf green
(net absorbers of CO2) being predominantly those developed nations of
Europe and North America; thus indicating built up environments absorbed
more CO2 than they emitted into the atmosphere.
By contrast the bulk of the regions colored red (so-called 'carbon polluters')
were in undeveloped, densely forested equatorial regions of Africa and South
America.
Huge Headache for Climate Policymakers
JAXA boasts that, "we can reduce the error of the estimated values when we
introduce IBUKI's observation data compared to that of the values calculated
in a conventional way based on ground observation data."
To all policymakers who study the Japanese maps it is apparent that the
areas of greatest CO2 emissions are those regions with least human
development and most natural vegetation: Equatorial Third World nations.
The Japanese evidence also disproves the often-cited hypothesis that Siberia
and other areas of northern Russia were natural vents for large scale CO2
outgassing, exacerbating global warming fears.
In effect, this compelling new data appears to show that the ashphalt and
concreted industrial nations are 'mopping up' carbon dioxide faster than their
manufacturers and consumers can emit it. If this is confirmed, it means a
cornerstone of man-made global warming may be in serious doubt.
Can Western Nations Still Proceed with Carbon Taxes?
But now that these so-called "global warming gases" have been precisely
measured across the planet the quandary for international policymakers is
what to do about plans to further implement international targets for CO2
reduction.
World leaders are getting set to face the latest round of UN climate change
talks in Durban next month and must discuss a replacement for the soon to
expire Kyoto Protocol, which binds nations to limited CO2 emissions.
The dilemma is whether the established UN global warming policy of the
'polluter pays' can any longer be sensibly upheld. Conventional political
thinking at previous UN climate conferences was to 'offset' carbon emissions
by making the worst polluters pay higher 'carbon taxes.'
But that theory now appears to be rendered redundant being that western
economies, believed to be the worst offenders, are in fact, contributing either
negligible or no measurable CO2 emissions whatsoever.
Indeed, the IBUKU data indicates that the areas of highest CO2 emissions are
precisely those regions with most vegetation and least industry and thus less
able to pay.
Thus, the unthinkable could be made real: the greenhouse gas theory of
climate change may collapse in the face of empirical evidence that
industrialization is shown to have no link to global warming.
For more information the IBUKU achievement is published in the Scientific
Online Letters on the Atmosphere (an online thesis magazine) issued by the
Meteorological Society of Japan.
Sources:
JAXA, Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, Greenhouse Gas
Observation Satellite 'IBUKI' (GOSAT), accessed online: October 30, 2011.
Gillis, J.,'Study Affirms Consensus on Climate Change,' New York Times,
(nytimes.com: accessed online: October 30, 2011)